Grenade On Display At Gettysburg National Military Park Destroyed Out Of Caution
National Parks Traveler
By NPT Staff on March 13th, 2020
Unsure whether the World War II grenade on display at the Gettysburg National Military Park was live or not, park staff removed the weapon and had it destroyed recently.
The grenade had been on display since March 2018 in an exhibit at the park's museum entitled “Eisenhower’s Leadership from Camp Colt to D-Day.”
The grenade in question was a circa 1944 Mark II Fragmentation Grenade with a M10A3 Fuse. This was a common armament that would have been used by U.S. forces during the D-Day assaults on Omaha and Utah Beaches in Normandy, France, on June 6, 1944, but was not owned by Dwight D. Eisenhower, according to park staff.
Region 1 - North Atlantic-Appalachian Office of the National Park Service is currently compiling information about historic armaments maintained in park museum collections within Northeast United States units. During that survey, Eisenhower National Historical Site staff identified that the grenade in question could not be conclusively proven to be active or inactive and it was properly disposed of on February 28 by certified technicians at an undisclosed location.